Fr. 110.00

Challenges and Negotiations for Women in Higher Education

English · Paperback / Softback

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CONCEPTUALISING CHALLENGES AND NEGOTIATIONS FOR WOMEN IN HIGHER EDUCATION 1 2 3 Pamela Cotterill , Sue Jackson and Gayle Letherby 1 2 3 Staffordshire University; Birkeck, University of London; University of Plymouth INTRODUCTION Despite the historical tradition of academia as a male space (Evans, 1995; Abbott et al, 2005; Stanley, 1997; Letherby, 2003) it is possible to argue that the expansion of higher education in the 1980s and 1990s benefited women more than it did men. By 1995 there were two and a half times more women in the academy than in 1970/1 (Abbott et al 2005), and in the decade to follow the numbers of women undergraduate students had overtaken men with a substantial minority of these being older, non-standard entrants. Furthermore, as Paula J Caplan (1997: 3) argues: Visions of the academic life draw us women toward it, picturing an intellectual community whose members search with passion and integrity for Truth and Knowledge. We imagine that in academia we shall find freedom from bias, freedom from worldly struggles of power and wealth, freedom to choose what to study and what to say, and an environment characterized by tolerance and openness, where everyone's energy is focused on the open exploration of ideas. However, whilst this may be the vision for some women, it is important not to view this widening of female participation in higher education through 'rose tinted glasses'.

List of contents

Ambivalent Positions in the Academy.- Challenging Women in the Male Academy: Think About Draining the Swamp.- Women: Mothers and Others:.- The Gendered Implications of Quality Assurance and Audit: Quality and Equality.- Process and Pedagogy at Work.- From Tangle to Web.- Strange Bedfellows.- Welcome to the Pleasure Dome.- Caring Monsters?.- Career - Identity - Home.- Distance Learners Juggling Home, Work and Study.- Three Ages of Woman.- Imaging 'Career'.- Women and Work/Life Balance.- Final Comments and Reflections: The Challenges and Negotiations of Lifelong Learning for Women in Higher Education.

Summary

CONCEPTUALISING CHALLENGES AND NEGOTIATIONS FOR WOMEN IN HIGHER EDUCATION 1 2 3 Pamela Cotterill , Sue Jackson and Gayle Letherby 1 2 3 Staffordshire University; Birkeck, University of London; University of Plymouth INTRODUCTION Despite the historical tradition of academia as a male space (Evans, 1995; Abbott et al, 2005; Stanley, 1997; Letherby, 2003) it is possible to argue that the expansion of higher education in the 1980s and 1990s benefited women more than it did men. By 1995 there were two and a half times more women in the academy than in 1970/1 (Abbott et al 2005), and in the decade to follow the numbers of women undergraduate students had overtaken men with a substantial minority of these being older, non-standard entrants. Furthermore, as Paula J Caplan (1997: 3) argues: Visions of the academic life draw us women toward it, picturing an intellectual community whose members search with passion and integrity for Truth and Knowledge. We imagine that in academia we shall find freedom from bias, freedom from worldly struggles of power and wealth, freedom to choose what to study and what to say, and an environment characterized by tolerance and openness, where everyone’s energy is focused on the open exploration of ideas. However, whilst this may be the vision for some women, it is important not to view this widening of female participation in higher education through ‘rose tinted glasses’.

Product details

Assisted by Pamela Cotterill (Editor), Su Jackson (Editor), Sue Jackson (Editor), Susan Jackson (Editor), Gayle Letherby (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 18.10.2010
 
EAN 9789048175390
ISBN 978-90-481-7539-0
No. of pages 260
Dimensions 155 mm x 15 mm x 235 mm
Weight 429 g
Illustrations XX, 260 p.
Series Lifelong Learning Book Series
Lifelong Learning Book Series
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Education > Adult education

C, Educational Policy, Sociology of Education, Education, higher education, Vocational Education, Educational strategies & policy, Social research & statistics, Professional & Vocational Education, Professional education, Professional and Vocational Education, Educational Policy and Politics, Education and state, Educational sociology, Industrial or vocational training

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